At the Afro-Asian Conference

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "At the Afro-Asian Conference"

Transcription

1 From Algeria Guevara traveled to Mali, Congo (Brazzaville), Guinea, Ghana, Dahomey, Tanzania, and the United Arab Republic. He then returned to Algiers to attend the Second Economic Seminar of the Organization of Afro- Asian Solidarity. The speech he made there, particularly in its passages regarding economic relations between underdeveloped countries and the countries of the Soviet bloc, was one of the most important of his career. His speech, delivered on February 26, 1965, is here translated in full. Dear Brothers: Cuba is attending this conference to raise on her own the voice of the peoples of America; and as we have emphasized on other occasions also, Cuba speaks both in her capacity as an underdeveloped country and as a country building socialism. It is not by accident that our delegation is permitted to give its opinion here among the peoples of Asia and Africa. A common aspiration unites us in our march toward the future: the defeat of imperialism. A common past of struggle against the same enemy has united us along the road. This is an assembly of embattled peoples, and the battle is being developed on two equally important fronts which require all our efforts. The struggle against imperialism for liberation from colonial or neocolonial shackles, imposed by political arms or firearms or a combination of the two, is inseparable from the struggle against backwardness and poverty; both are steps on the same road leading toward the creation of a new society of justice and plenty. file:///f /litany/cheafroasianconference.htm (1 of 13) [6/27/2002 4:24:42 AM]

2 It is imperative to take political power and to liquidate the oppressor classes; but then the second stage of the struggle, which perhaps may have more difficult features than the first, must be faced. Ever since monopoly capital took over the world it has kept the greater part of humanity in poverty, dividing all the profits among the most powerful nations. The higher standard of living in those nations is based on the misery of ours. Thus to raise the standard of living of the underdeveloped peoples, there must be a fight against imperialism. And each time a country is torn away from the imperialists, it is not only a partial battle won against the main enemy, but it also contributes to the general weakening of that enemy and is one step more toward final victory. There are no boundaries in this struggle to the death. We cannot be indifferent to what happens anywhere in the world, for a victory by any country over imperialism is our victory; just as any country's defeat is a defeat for all of us. The practice of proletarian internationalism is not only a duty for the peoples struggling for a better future, it is an inescapable necessity. If the imperialist enemy, American or any other, develops its attack against the underdeveloped peoples and the socialist countries, simple logic determines the necessity of an alliance between the underdeveloped peoples and the socialist countries. If there were no other uniting factor, the common enemy should be it. Of course this alliance cannot be made spontaneously, without discussions or previous birth pangs, which sometimes can be painful. Each time a country is freed, we say, it is a defeat for the world imperialist system, but we must agree that real liberation or breaking away from the imperialist system is not achieved by the mere act of proclaiming independence or winning an armed victory in a revolution. Freedom is achieved when imperialist economic domination over a people is brought to an end. file:///f /litany/cheafroasianconference.htm (2 of 13) [6/27/2002 4:24:42 AM]

3 Therefore the socialist countries have a vital stake in making these acts of breaking away from the imperialist system successful; and it is our international duty, a duty determined by our guiding ideology, to make this liberation as rapid and thoroughgoing as possible. A conclusion must be drawn from all this: The development of countries now starting out on the road to liberation should be paid for by the socialist countries. We state it this way without any intention whatsoever of blackmail or dramatics, nor of currying favor with the Afro- Asian peoples, but as a profound conviction. Socialism cannot exist without a change in conscience to a new fraternal attitude toward humanity, not only within the societies which are building or have built socialism, but also on a world scale toward all peoples suffering from imperialist oppression. We believe the duty of aiding dependent countries should be approached in such a spirit. There should not be any more talk about developing mutually beneficial trade based on prices rigged against underdeveloped countries by the law of value and the inequitable relations of international trade brought about by that law. How can one apply the term "mutual benefit" to the selling at world-market prices of raw materials costing limitless sweat and suffering in the underdeveloped countries and the buying of machinery produced in today's big, automated factories? If we establish that kind of relation between the two groups of nations, we must agree that the socialist countries are, in a way, accomplices of imperialist exploitation. It can be argued that the amount of exchange with underdeveloped countries is an insignificant part of the foreign trade of the socialist countries. That is a great truth, but it does not eliminate the immoral character of the exchange. The socialist countries have the moral duty of liquidating their tacit complicity with the exploiting countries of the West. The fact that the trade file:///f /litany/cheafroasianconference.htm (3 of 13) [6/27/2002 4:24:42 AM]

4 today is small does not mean much. In 1959, Cuba sold sugar only occasionally to a socialist-bloc country, usually through English brokers or brokers of other nationalities. Today, 80 per cent of Cuba's trade is with that area; all her vital supplies come from the socialist camp, and in fact she has joined that camp. We cannot say that this was brought about solely by the increase in trade, nor that the increase in trade was brought about by the destruction of the old order and the adoption of the socialist form of development; both extremes touch and are interrelated. We did not start out on the path that ends in communism, foreseeing all steps as logically predetermined by an ideology advancing toward a fixed goal. The truths of socialism and, even more, the naked truths of imperialism forged our people and showed them the path which we consciously took later. The peoples of Asia and Africa that are advancing toward their own complete liberation should take the same path. They will follow it sooner or later, regardless of what modifying adjective their socialism may take today. There is no other definition of socialism valid for us than that of the abolition of the exploitation of man by man. As long as this has not been achieved, we are in the stage of the building of socialist society; and if instead of achieving this goal, the elimination of exploitation comes to a halt, or worse, is reversed, then it is false even to speak of building socialism. We have to prepare conditions so that our brothers can directly and consciously take the path of the complete abolition of exploitation, but we cannot ask them to take that path if we ourselves are accomplices of that exploitation. If we were asked what the methods were for establishing just prices, we could not answer because we do not know concretely the full scope of the problems involved. All we know is that, after political discussions, the Soviet Union and Cuba signed agreements file:///f /litany/cheafroasianconference.htm (4 of 13) [6/27/2002 4:24:42 AM]

5 advantageous to us, in accordance with which we will sell five million tons of sugar at prices fixed above those of the so-called Free World Sugar Market. The People's Republic of China also pays those prices in buying from us. This is only a beginning; the real task consists of fixing prices that will permit development. A great ideological change is needed to change the character of international relations; foreign trade should not determine politics, but should on the contrary be subordinated to the politics of fraternity toward peoples. Let us briefly analyze the problem of long-term credits for developing basic industries. Frequently we find that beneficiary countries attempt to create industrial bases too large for their actual capability, whose products would not be all consumed domestically. And they mortgage their reserves in this effort. Our reasoning is that in the socialist states investments weigh directly on the state budget, and are only paid off through the utilization of what is produced by the investment in the entire manufacturing cycle. We propose that some thought be given to the possibility of making these kinds of investments in the underdeveloped countries. In this way an immense hidden force in our continents - miserably exploited but never aided in their development - could be tapped and a new era begun of a real international division of labor, based not on the history of what has been done up to now, but rather on the future history of what can be done. The states, in whose territories the new investments are to be made, will have all the inherent rights of sovereign property over them without any payment or credit due, but they would be obligated to supply agreed-upon quantities of products to the investor countries for a certain number of years at fixed prices. The method for financing the local expenses incurred by the investor file:///f /litany/cheafroasianconference.htm (5 of 13) [6/27/2002 4:24:42 AM]

6 country in such projects also deserves study. The supplying of marketable goods on long-term credits to the governments of underdeveloped countries could be one form of aid not requiring the expenditure of freely convertible funds. Another difficult problem is the mastering of technology. The shortage of technicians in underdeveloped countries is well known to all. Educational institutions and teachers are lacking. Sometimes we even lack an understanding of which of our needs should be given priority in a program of technical, cultural, and ideological development. The socialist countries should supply the aid for organizing centers for technical training; they should insist upon the great importance of this, and supply technicians to fill the present need. It is necessary to insist further on this last point. The technicians who come to our countries must be exemplary. They are comrades who find themselves in a strange environment, often one hostile to technology, with a different language and totally different customs. The technicians facing this difficult task should be, first of all, communists in the most profound and noble sense of the word. With this single quality, plus flexibility and a modicum of organization, wonders can be accomplished. We know it can be done because brother countries have sent us a certain number of technicians who have done more toward the development of our country than ten institutes, and have contributed more to our friendship than ten ambassadors or a hundred diplomatic receptions. f we could achieve the above-listed points, and also if the underdeveloped could acquire all the technology of the advanced countries unhampered by the present system of patents, which prevents the spread of the inventions of different countries, we would progress a great deal in our common task. Imperialism has been defeated in many partial battles. But it remains a file:///f /litany/cheafroasianconference.htm (6 of 13) [6/27/2002 4:24:42 AM]

7 considerable force in the world, and we cannot expect its final defeat save through effort and sacrifice on the part of all of us. The proposed steps, however, cannot be taken unilaterally. The development of underdeveloped countries should be paid for by the socialist countries, we agree. But the underdeveloped countries must also exert all their forces to embark resolutely upon the road of building a new society - whatever its name may be - where the machine, an instrument of labor, is no longer an instrument of the exploitation of man by man. Nor can the confidence of the socialist countries be expected by those who play at balancing between capitalism and socialism, trying to use each force as a counterweight in order to derive certain advantages from such competition. A new policy of absolute seriousness should govern the relations between the two groups of societies. It is worth emphasizing again that the means of production should preferably be in the hands of the state, so that features of exploitation may gradually disappear. On the other hand, development should not be left to complete improvisation; it is necessary to plan the construction of the new society. Planning is one of the laws of socialism; and without it, it would not exist. Without correct planning there can be no adequate guarantee that all the various sectors of a country's economy will combine harmoniously for the forward strides which our epoch demands. Planning is not an isolated problem of each of our small countries, distorted in their development, possessors of some raw materials or producers of some manufactured or semimanufactured goods, but lacking in most others. From the very beginning, planning should tend toward some regional view in order to coordinate the various national economies, and thus bring about an integration on the basis of a genuine mutual benefit. We believe the road ahead is full of dangers, not dangers conjured up or foreseen in the distant future by some superior mind, but palpable dangers deriving from the realities besetting us. The fight against colonialism has reached its final stages; but in the present era, colonial file:///f /litany/cheafroasianconference.htm (7 of 13) [6/27/2002 4:24:42 AM]

8 status is only a consequence of imperialist domination. As long as imperialism exists, it will, by definition, exert its domination over other countries. Today that domination is called neocolonialism. Neocolonialism was first developed in South America, throughout the whole continent, and today it begins to be felt with increasing intensity in Africa and Asia. Its forms of penetration and development have distinct characteristics. One is the brutal aggression we have seen in the Congo. Brute force, without concealment or disguise of any kind, is its final weapon. But there is another more subtle form: political penetration in liberated countries, alliances with the growing indigenous bourgeoisies, development of a parasitic bourgeoisie closely linked to the old metropolitan interests. This development may be fostered by a certain temporary rise in the popular standard of living, because in a very backward country the simple step from feudal to capitalist relations marks a great advance, although it may later bring dire consequences for the workers. Neocolonialism has shown its claws in the Congo. That is not a sign of strength, but of weakness; it had to resort to force, its final weapon, as an economic argument. This has evoked opposition of great intensity. But at the same time a much more subtle form of neocolonialism is being practiced in other countries of Africa and Asia, and is rapidly bringing about what some have called the South- Americanization of these continents; that is, the development of a parasitic bourgeoisie, which adds nothing to the national wealth of their countries, but even goes so far as to deposit its huge dishonest profits in capitalist banks abroad; and to obtain more profits, this parasitic bourgeoisie signs pacts with foreigners with absolute disregard for the welfare of the people of their countries. There are also other dangers such as competition between brother countries, which are politically friendly and sometimes neighbors, because both are trying simultaneously to develop the same investments in markets which cannot take the increased volume of products, This file:///f /litany/cheafroasianconference.htm (8 of 13) [6/27/2002 4:24:42 AM]

9 competition has the disadvantage of wasting energies that could be used for much greater economic cooperation, and furthermore it allows the imperialist monopolies to play games with us. When it has been impossible to get a certain investment from the socialist camp, there have been occasions when it has been obtained by agreements with the capitalists. Such capitalist investments not only have the disadvantage of the way the loans are made, but others, such as the creation of a joint corporation with a dangerous neighbor. Since these investments in general parallel those made in other states, they tend to cause divisions between friendly countries by the creation of economic rivalries; and further, they create the dangers of corruption flowing from the constant presence of capitalism which is so skillful in conjuring up visions of advancement and luxury in the minds of many people. Later on, when prices in the saturated market decline, the countries engaged in the parallel production find themselves obliged to seek new loans, or to permit additional investments for further competition. The falling of the economy into the hands of the monopolies, and a slow but sure return to the past is the final consequence of such a policy. As we see it, the only safe way of obtaining investments from the capitalist powers is for the state to have direct control as the sole purchaser of goods, limiting imperialist participation to the supplying of goods in accordance with the contracts and not permitting them to get beyond the street door to our house. And here it is just and proper to take advantage of inter-imperialist contradictions in order to secure the least burdensome terms. It is necessary to watch the "disinterested" economic, cultural, and other aid which imperialism grants directly or, since it is better received that way in some parts of the world, through puppet states. If all of the dangers pointed out are not seen in time, some countries that began their task of national liberation with faith and enthusiasm may find file:///f /litany/cheafroasianconference.htm (9 of 13) [6/27/2002 4:24:42 AM]

10 themselves unwittingly stepping onto the neocolonial road, and find further that monopoly domination has been gradually establishing itself within their territories with such subtlety that its effects are difficult to discern until they brutally make themselves felt. There is a big job to be done. Immense problems confront our two worlds - that of the socialist countries and that called the "third world" - problems directly concerning man and his welfare, and the struggle against the main culprit for our backwardness. In the face of these problems, all countries and peoples aware of their duties, of the dangers inherent in the situation, of the sacrifices required by development, should take concrete steps to cement our friendship in the two fields - which can never be separated - the economic and political. And we should organize a great solid bloc which, in its turn, helps new countries to free themselves not only from political domination, but from imperialist economic domination as well. Our attitude toward liberation by armed struggle against an oppressor political power should be in accordance with the rules of proletarian internationalism. If it is absurd to imagine that in a socialist country at war a factory manager would demand a guarantee of payment before shipping to the front the tanks produced by his factory, it is no less absurd to inquire of a people fighting for liberation, or needing arms to defend its freedom, whether or not they can guarantee payment. Arms cannot be regarded as merchandise in our world. They should be delivered to the peoples asking for them for use against the common enemy without any charge at all, and in quantities determined by the need and their availability. That is the spirit in which the USSR and the People's Republic of China have offered us their military aid. We are socialists, we constitute a guarantee of the proper utilization of those arms; but we are not the only ones. And all of us should receive the same treatment. To the ominous attacks by American imperialism against Vietnam and the Congo, the answer should be the supplying of all the defense equipment file:///f /litany/cheafroasianconference.htm (10 of 13) [6/27/2002 4:24:42 AM]

11 they need, and to offer them our full solidarity without any conditions whatsoever. In the economic field we must conquer the road to development with the most advanced technology possible. We cannot climb the long ascending road from feudalism to the atomic and automated era. That would be the road of immense and largely useless sacrifices. It is necessary to seize technology at the height it has attained today to make the great technological leap ahead which will reduce the gap between the more developed countries and ourselves. This means big factories and a properly developed agriculture. And above all, its foundation must be a technological and ideological culture with enough mass base and strength to guarantee the continuing sustenance of the institutes and research organizations which have to be created in each country - as well as the men who, utilizing the present technology, may be capable of adapting themselves to the newly mastered technology. These cadres must be conscious of their duties to the society in which they live. There cannot be an adequate technological culture if it is not complemented by ideological culture. And in most of our countries a proper foundation for industrial development, which is what determines the growth of modern society, cannot exist if we do not begin by assuring for our people the necessary food, the essential consumer goods, and adequate education. A good part of the national revenues must be spent on the so-called unproductive investment in education, and special attention must be given to the development of agricultural productivity. The latter has reached incredible levels in many capitalist countries, producing the senseless crisis of overproduction and a surplus of grain and other food products and industrial raw materials in the developed countries while the rest of the world suffers hunger, although it has enough land and labor to produce several times over what is needed to feed the entire world. file:///f /litany/cheafroasianconference.htm (11 of 13) [6/27/2002 4:24:42 AM]

12 Agriculture must be considered a fundamental pillar of our development, and therefore changes in the agricultural structure, adjustment to the new technological possibilities, as well as the new duties of eliminating the exploitation of man, should be fundamental aspects of the work Before making costly decisions that could cause irreparable damage, a careful study of the national territory is needed. This is one of the preliminary steps in economic research and an absolute prerequisite for correct planning. We warmly support Algeria's proposition for institutionalizing our relations. We would like to make some supplementary suggestions: First, for the Union to be an instrument in the struggle against imperialism, the cooperation of Latin American countries and the alliance of the socialist countries is necessary. Second, we should be vigilant about the revolutionary character of the Union, preventing the admission into it of governments or movements not identified with the general aspirations of the people, and creating mechanisms that would permit the separation from it of any government or movement diverging from the just road. Third, we must advocate the establishment of new relations which create a revolutionary jurisprudence to defend us in case of conflict, and to give new meaning to the relations between us and the rest of the world. We speak the language of revolution and we honestly fight for the victory of that cause. But frequently we entangle ourselves in the nets of an international law created as the result of confrontations between the imperialist powers, and not by the free peoples, the just peoples, in the course of their struggles. For example,.our peoples suffer the painful pressure of foreign bases established on their territories, or they have to carry the heavy burdens of file:///f /litany/cheafroasianconference.htm (12 of 13) [6/27/2002 4:24:42 AM]

13 foreign debts of incredible size. The history of these burdens is well known to all of us. Puppet governments, governments weakened by long struggles for liberation or by the operation of the laws of the capitalist market, have acquiesced to treaties which endanger us internally and compromise our future. This is the time to throw off the yoke, to force renegotiation of oppressive foreign debts, and to force the imperialists to give up their bases for aggression on our territories. I would not want to conclude these remarks, this repetition of concepts you all know, without calling the attention of this gathering to the fact that Cuba is not the only American nation; it is simply the only one that has the opportunity of speaking before you today; and that other countries are shedding their blood to win the rights we have; and that when we send our greetings from here, and from all the conferences and the places where they may be held, to the heroic peoples of Vietnam, Laos, so-called Portuguese Guinea, South Africa, or Palestine - to all exploited countries fighting for their emancipation - we should simultaneously extend our voice, our hand, our encouragement, to our brother peoples in Venezuela, Guatemala and Colombia who today, arms in hand, are giving a resolute No! to the imperialist enemy. And there are few settings from which to declare this as symbolic as Algiers, one of the most heroic capitals of freedom. And the magnificent Algerian people, steeled as few others in suffering for freedom, and firmly led by its party headed by our dear comrade Ahmed Ben Bella, serves as an inspiration to us in this fight without quarter against world imperialism. file:///f /litany/cheafroasianconference.htm (13 of 13) [6/27/2002 4:24:42 AM]

A common aspiration: wit

A common aspiration: wit A common aspiration: wit A common aspiration: the overthrow of imperialism, unites Cuba with Africa and Asia The Speech given by Commandant Ernesto Gue- S:~~n~hAf~~~~~~e~EL~~:~tco~;e~~~::ha:lJ~~ Algeria

More information

Conference Against Imperialist Globalisation and War

Conference Against Imperialist Globalisation and War Inaugural address at Mumbai Resistance 2004 Conference Against Imperialist Globalisation and War 17 th January 2004, Mumbai, India Dear Friends and Comrades, I thank the organizers of Mumbai Resistance

More information

The Principal Contradiction

The Principal Contradiction The Principal Contradiction [Communist ORIENTATION No. 1, April 10, 1975, p. 2-6] Communist Orientation No 1., April 10, 1975, p. 2-6 "There are many contradictions in the process of development of a complex

More information

Imperialism and War. Capitalist imperialism produces 3 kinds of wars: 1. War of conquest to establish imperialist relations.

Imperialism and War. Capitalist imperialism produces 3 kinds of wars: 1. War of conquest to establish imperialist relations. Imperialism and War Capitalist imperialism produces 3 kinds of wars: 1. War of conquest to establish imperialist relations. 2. War of national liberation to force out the imperial master. 3. War of inter-imperial

More information

Vladimir Lenin, Extracts ( )

Vladimir Lenin, Extracts ( ) Vladimir Lenin, Extracts (1899-1920) Our Programme (1899) We take our stand entirely on the Marxist theoretical position: Marxism was the first to transform socialism from a utopia into a science, to lay

More information

The Cadres: Backbone of the Revolution By Che Guevara

The Cadres: Backbone of the Revolution By Che Guevara The Cadres: Backbone of the Revolution By Che Guevara It is not necessary to dwell upon the characteristics of our revolution; upon its original form, with its dashes of spontaneity which marked the transition

More information

Do Classes Exist the USSR? By S. M. Zhurovkov, M.S.

Do Classes Exist the USSR? By S. M. Zhurovkov, M.S. Do Classes Exist the USSR? By S. M. Zhurovkov, M.S. ONE of the conditions for the fulfilment of the tasks of building up a communist society, which the Soviet people are now solving, is the elimination

More information

Harry S. Truman Inaugural Address Washington, D.C. January 20, 1949

Harry S. Truman Inaugural Address Washington, D.C. January 20, 1949 Harry S. Truman Inaugural Address Washington, D.C. January 20, 1949 Mr. Vice President, Mr. Chief Justice, fellow citizens: I accept with humility the honor which the American people have conferred upon

More information

WILPF RESOLUTIONS. 18th Congress New Delhi, India 28 December January 1971

WILPF RESOLUTIONS. 18th Congress New Delhi, India 28 December January 1971 WILPF RESOLUTIONS 18th Congress New Delhi, India 28 December 1970-2 January 1971 The Women s International League for Peace and Freedom welcomes the designation by the United Nations of the 1970s as the

More information

KIM IL SUNG. On Abolishing the Tax System

KIM IL SUNG. On Abolishing the Tax System KIM IL SUNG On Abolishing the Tax System A Law Adopted by the Fifth Supreme People's Assembly of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea at Its Third Session March 21, 1974 It is the noble revolutionary

More information

early twentieth century Peru, but also for revolutionaries desiring to flexibly apply Marxism to

early twentieth century Peru, but also for revolutionaries desiring to flexibly apply Marxism to José Carlos Mariátegui s uniquely diverse Marxist thought spans a wide array of topics and offers invaluable insight not only for historians seeking to better understand the reality of early twentieth

More information

1966 Albanian-Korean Joint Declaration

1966 Albanian-Korean Joint Declaration Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org 1966 Albanian-Korean Joint Declaration Citation: Albanian-Korean Joint Declaration, 1966, History and Public Policy Program

More information

January, 1964 Information of the Bulgarian Embassy in Havana Regarding the Situation in Cuba in 1963

January, 1964 Information of the Bulgarian Embassy in Havana Regarding the Situation in Cuba in 1963 Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org January, 1964 Information of the Bulgarian Embassy in Havana Regarding the Situation in Cuba in 1963 Citation: Information

More information

KIM IL SUNG. The Life of a Revolutionary Should Begin with Struggle and End with Struggle

KIM IL SUNG. The Life of a Revolutionary Should Begin with Struggle and End with Struggle KIM IL SUNG The Life of a Revolutionary Should Begin with Struggle and End with Struggle Speech Made at a Banquet Given by the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea and the Government of the

More information

April 01, 1955 Report from the Chinese Foreign Ministry, 'The Asian- African Conference'

April 01, 1955 Report from the Chinese Foreign Ministry, 'The Asian- African Conference' Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org April 01, 1955 Report from the Chinese Foreign Ministry, 'The Asian- African Conference' Citation: Report from the Chinese

More information

On 1st May 2018 on the 200th anniversary of the birth of Karl Marx, and on the 170th anniversary of the first issue of Il Manifesto of the Communist

On 1st May 2018 on the 200th anniversary of the birth of Karl Marx, and on the 170th anniversary of the first issue of Il Manifesto of the Communist On 1st May 2018 on the 200th anniversary of the birth of Karl Marx, and on the 170th anniversary of the first issue of Il Manifesto of the Communist Party, written by Marx and Engels is the great opportunity

More information

Unit 11: The Cold War B A T T L E O F T H E S U P E R P O W E R S :

Unit 11: The Cold War B A T T L E O F T H E S U P E R P O W E R S : Unit 11: The Cold War B A T T L E O F T H E S U P E R P O W E R S : 1 9 4 6-1 9 9 1 Textbook Help Remember your textbook has a lot of extra information that can really help you learn more about the Cold

More information

Address to the Italian Proletariat On the Current Possibilities for Social Revolution 1

Address to the Italian Proletariat On the Current Possibilities for Social Revolution 1 Address to the Italian Proletariat On the Current Possibilities for Social Revolution 1 By the Italian Section of the Situationist International Translated by Bill Brown Comrades, What the Italian proletariat

More information

In Refutation of Instant Socialist Revolution in India

In Refutation of Instant Socialist Revolution in India In Refutation of Instant Socialist Revolution in India Moni Guha Some political parties who claim themselves as Marxist- Leninists are advocating instant Socialist Revolution in India refuting the programme

More information

CH 17: The European Moment in World History, Revolutions in Industry,

CH 17: The European Moment in World History, Revolutions in Industry, CH 17: The European Moment in World History, 1750-1914 Revolutions in Industry, 1750-1914 Explore the causes & consequences of the Industrial Revolution Root Europe s Industrial Revolution in a global

More information

CHAPTER XXII OUTLINE I.

CHAPTER XXII OUTLINE I. CHAPTER XXII OUTLINE I. Opening A. The Berlin Wall was breached on. 1. Built in to seal off from 2. Became a major symbol of B. Communism had originally been greeted by many as a. 1. Communist regimes

More information

The Common Program of The Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, 1949

The Common Program of The Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, 1949 The Common Program of The Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, 1949 Adopted by the First Plenary Session of the Chinese People's PCC on September 29th, 1949 in Peking PREAMBLE The Chinese

More information

KIM IL SUNG FOR THE STRENGTHENING OF COOPERATION BETWEEN THE NON-ALIGNED COUNTRIES IN THEIR NEWS SERVICES

KIM IL SUNG FOR THE STRENGTHENING OF COOPERATION BETWEEN THE NON-ALIGNED COUNTRIES IN THEIR NEWS SERVICES KIM IL SUNG FOR THE STRENGTHENING OF COOPERATION BETWEEN THE NON-ALIGNED COUNTRIES IN THEIR NEWS SERVICES WORKING PEOPLE OF THE WHOLE WORLD, UNITE! KIM IL SUNG FOR THE STRENGTHENING OF COOPERATION BETWEEN

More information

ALGIERS CHARTER UNIVERSAL DECLARATION OF THE RIGHTS OF PEOPLES Algiers, 4 July 1976

ALGIERS CHARTER UNIVERSAL DECLARATION OF THE RIGHTS OF PEOPLES Algiers, 4 July 1976 ALGIERS CHARTER UNIVERSAL DECLARATION OF THE RIGHTS OF PEOPLES Algiers, 4 July 1976 PREAMBLE We live at a time of great hopes and deep despair: - a time of conflicts and contradictions; - a time when liberation

More information

Introduction to the Cold War

Introduction to the Cold War Introduction to the Cold War What is the Cold War? The Cold War is the conflict that existed between the United States and Soviet Union from 1945 to 1991. It is called cold because the two sides never

More information

Central idea of the Manifesto

Central idea of the Manifesto Central idea of the Manifesto The central idea of the Manifesto (Engels Preface to 1888 English Edition, p. 3) o I. In every historical epoch you find A prevailing mode of economic production and exchange

More information

Economic Systems and the United States

Economic Systems and the United States Economic Systems and the United States Mr. Sinclair Fall, 2016 Traditional Economies In early times, all societies had traditional economies Advantages: clearly answers main economic question, little disagreement

More information

ADDRESS BY GATT DIRECTOR-GENERAL TO UNCTAD VIII IN CARTAGENA, COLOMBIA

ADDRESS BY GATT DIRECTOR-GENERAL TO UNCTAD VIII IN CARTAGENA, COLOMBIA CENTRE WILLIAM-RAPPARD, 154, RUE DE LAUSANNE, 1211 GENEVE 21, TEL. 022 73951 11 GATT/1531 11 February 1992 ADDRESS BY GATT DIRECTOR-GENERAL TO UNCTAD VIII IN CARTAGENA, COLOMBIA Attached is the text of

More information

ICOR Founding Conference

ICOR Founding Conference Statute of the ICOR 6 October 2010 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 I. Preamble "Workers of all countries, unite!" this urgent call of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels at the end of the Communist Manifesto was formulated

More information

December 31, 1975 Todor Zhivkov, Reports to Bulgarian Communist Party Politburo on his Visit to Cuba

December 31, 1975 Todor Zhivkov, Reports to Bulgarian Communist Party Politburo on his Visit to Cuba Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org December 31, 1975 Todor Zhivkov, Reports to Bulgarian Communist Party Politburo on his Visit to Cuba Citation: Todor Zhivkov,

More information

THE rece,nt international conferences

THE rece,nt international conferences TEHERAN-HISTORY'S GREATEST TURNING POINT BY EARL BROWDER (An Address delivered at Rakosi Hall, Bridgeport, Connecticut, THE rece,nt international conferences at Moscow, Cairo, and Teheran have consolidated

More information

AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY. result. If pacificism results in oppression, he must be willing to suffer oppression.

AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY. result. If pacificism results in oppression, he must be willing to suffer oppression. result. If pacificism results in oppression, he must be willing to suffer oppression. C. Isolationism in Various Forms. There are many people who believe that America still can and should avoid foreign

More information

Proletarians of all countries, unite! DEFEND CHAIRMAN GONZALO, GREAT MARXIST-LENINIST-MAOIST!

Proletarians of all countries, unite! DEFEND CHAIRMAN GONZALO, GREAT MARXIST-LENINIST-MAOIST! Proletarians of all countries, unite! DEFEND CHAIRMAN GONZALO, GREAT MARXIST-LENINIST-MAOIST! Central Committee Communist Party of Peru December 2017 DEFEND CHAIRMAN GONZALO, GREAT MARXIST-LENINIST-MAOIST!

More information

Imperialism & Resistance

Imperialism & Resistance Imperialism & Resistance by Saul Straussman and Bridgette Byrd O Connor Military Tech plays a deadly role Clearly there were economic, political, religious, exploratory and ideological motives to justify

More information

DOCUMENT. Report on the negotiations of Deputy Foreign Minister Róber Garai in Iraq between December 11-13, 1984 (December 22, 1984)

DOCUMENT. Report on the negotiations of Deputy Foreign Minister Róber Garai in Iraq between December 11-13, 1984 (December 22, 1984) DOCUMENT Report on the negotiations of Deputy Foreign Minister Róber Garai in Iraq between December 11-13, 1984 (December 22, 1984) TOP SECRET! Made in: 12 copies Sent to: Comrade Várkonyi Comrade Roska

More information

Overview: The World Community from

Overview: The World Community from Overview: The World Community from 1945 1990 By Encyclopaedia Britannica, adapted by Newsela staff on 06.15.17 Word Count 874 Level 1050L During the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968, Czechoslovakians

More information

Manifesto of the Communist Party

Manifesto of the Communist Party Karl Marx and Frederick Engels Manifesto of the Communist Party 1848 A spectre is haunting Europe -- the spectre of communism. All the powers of old Europe have entered into a holy alliance to exorcise

More information

HIGHER SCHOOL CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION MODERN HISTORY 2/3 UNIT (COMMON) Time allowed Three hours (Plus 5 minutes reading time)

HIGHER SCHOOL CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION MODERN HISTORY 2/3 UNIT (COMMON) Time allowed Three hours (Plus 5 minutes reading time) N E W S O U T H W A L E S HIGHER SCHOOL CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION 1995 MODERN HISTORY 2/3 UNIT (COMMON) Time allowed Three hours (Plus 5 minutes reading time) DIRECTIONS TO CANDIDATES Attempt FOUR questions.

More information

COLONEL JOHN E. COON, USA

COLONEL JOHN E. COON, USA by, COLONEL JOHN E. COON, USA (What domestic and foreign goals are likely to influence policy formation in Peking during the foreseeable future? What constraints are operative on the achievement of such

More information

APWH Ch 19: Internal Troubles, External Threats Big Picture and Margin Questions

APWH Ch 19: Internal Troubles, External Threats Big Picture and Margin Questions APWH Ch 19: Internal Troubles, External Threats Big Picture and Margin Questions 1. In what ways did the Industrial Revolution shape the character of nineteenth century European imperialism? Need for raw

More information

International History Declassified

International History Declassified Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org March 10, 1965 Record of Conversation between the Chinese Ambassador to the Soviet Union Pan Zili and the North Korean

More information

Revolution. The October. and some lessons for the struggle for socialism in the U.S.

Revolution. The October. and some lessons for the struggle for socialism in the U.S. The October Revolution Armed soldiers carrying banner reading communism march in Moscow, 1917 and some lessons for the struggle for socialism in the U.S. This paper prepared collectively by the central

More information

The End of Bipolarity

The End of Bipolarity 1 P a g e Soviet System: The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics [USSR] came into being after the socialist revolution in Russia in 1917. The revolution was inspired by the ideals of socialism, as opposed

More information

The Cold War: Why did the United States and the USSR enter into the Cold War after World War II?

The Cold War: Why did the United States and the USSR enter into the Cold War after World War II? The Cold War: Why did the United States and the USSR enter into the Cold War after World War II? INTRODUCTION FOR STUDENTS In this lesson, you will learn about the source of tensions between the United

More information

Economic Systems and the United States

Economic Systems and the United States Economic Systems and the United States Mr. Sinclair Fall, 2016 Another Question What are the basic economic questions? Answer: who gets what, where, when, why, and how Answer #2: what gets produced, how

More information

Advances in Computer Science Research, volume 82 7th International Conference on Social Network, Communication and Education (SNCE 2017)

Advances in Computer Science Research, volume 82 7th International Conference on Social Network, Communication and Education (SNCE 2017) 7th International Conference on Social Network, Communication and Education (SNCE 2017) The Spirit of Long March and the Ideological and Political Education in Higher Vocational Colleges: Based on the

More information

World History (Survey) Restructuring the Postwar World, 1945 Present

World History (Survey) Restructuring the Postwar World, 1945 Present World History (Survey) Chapter 33: Restructuring the Postwar World, 1945 Present Section 1: Two Superpowers Face Off The United States and the Soviet Union were allies during World War II. In February

More information

Extracts from the opening address by President Sukarno at the Asian-African Journalists Conference, Bandung, 24 April 1963

Extracts from the opening address by President Sukarno at the Asian-African Journalists Conference, Bandung, 24 April 1963 Extracts from the opening address by President Sukarno at the Asian-African Journalists Conference, Bandung, 24 April 1963 From: G. Modelski, ed., The New Emerging Forces: Documents on the ideology of

More information

Relationship of the Party with the NPA and the United Front

Relationship of the Party with the NPA and the United Front Relationship of the Party with the NPA and the United Front August 1992 DIRECTIVE To : All Units and Members of the Party From : EC/CC Subject: Relationship of the Party with the NPA and the United Front

More information

April 30, 1955 Zhou Enlai s Report to the CCP Central Committee and Mao Zedong Regarding the Economic Cooperation Issue

April 30, 1955 Zhou Enlai s Report to the CCP Central Committee and Mao Zedong Regarding the Economic Cooperation Issue Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org April 30, 1955 Zhou Enlai s Report to the CCP Central Committee and Mao Zedong Regarding the Economic Cooperation Issue

More information

Topic 5: The Cold War (Compiled from 10 Topic and 6 Topic Format) Revised 2012

Topic 5: The Cold War (Compiled from 10 Topic and 6 Topic Format) Revised 2012 Topic 5: The Cold War (Compiled from 10 Topic and 6 Topic Format) Revised 2012 [Since 1998, the pattern is: two subject specific questions, two questions allowing a choice of examples, and one question

More information

30 SEPTEMBER 2016 JOSÉ MARTÍ MEMORIAL HAVANA, CUBA. *Check Against Delivery

30 SEPTEMBER 2016 JOSÉ MARTÍ MEMORIAL HAVANA, CUBA. *Check Against Delivery ACCEPTANCE SPEECH BY HIS EXCELLENCY DR. SAM NUJOMA, FOUNDING PRESIDENT AND FATHER OF THE NAMIBIAN NATION, ON THE OCCASION OF THE CONFERMENT OF THE MEHDI BEN BARKA SOLIDARITY ORDER BY THE ORGANIZATION OF

More information

December 01, 1965 Speech Given by Party First Secretary Le Duan to the 12th Plenum of the Party Central Committee

December 01, 1965 Speech Given by Party First Secretary Le Duan to the 12th Plenum of the Party Central Committee Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org December 01, 1965 Speech Given by Party First Secretary Le Duan to the 12th Plenum of the Party Central Committee Citation:

More information

Topic 5: The Cold War (Compiled from 10 Topic and 6 Topic Format) Revised 2014

Topic 5: The Cold War (Compiled from 10 Topic and 6 Topic Format) Revised 2014 Topic 5: The Cold War (Compiled from 10 Topic and 6 Topic Format) Revised 2014 [Since 1998, the pattern is: two subject specific questions, two questions allowing a choice of examples, and one question

More information

The Victory of Communism is Inevitable!

The Victory of Communism is Inevitable! The Victory of Communism is Inevitable! Nikita Khrushchev s speech to the 22nd Communist Party Congress in 1962. The most rabid imperialists, acting on the principle of after us the deluge, openly voice

More information

DISCLAIMER AND REMINDER:

DISCLAIMER AND REMINDER: Worth 15 Points DISCLAIMER AND REMINDER: Homework and Class Participation accounts for 15% of your overall course grade. Not completing or not fully completing one or more homework assignments will have

More information

Dublin City Schools Social Studies Graded Course of Study Modern World History

Dublin City Schools Social Studies Graded Course of Study Modern World History K-12 Social Studies Vision Dublin City Schools Social Studies Graded Course of Study The Dublin City Schools K-12 Social Studies Education will provide many learning opportunities that will help students

More information

China s Road of Peaceful Development and the Building of Communities of Interests

China s Road of Peaceful Development and the Building of Communities of Interests China s Road of Peaceful Development and the Building of Communities of Interests Zheng Bijian Former Executive Vice President, Party School of the Central Committee of CPC; Director, China Institute for

More information

INFORMATION-DISCUSSION. Hồ Chí Minh Thought on International Relations of the Vietnamese Revolution in the 1920s

INFORMATION-DISCUSSION. Hồ Chí Minh Thought on International Relations of the Vietnamese Revolution in the 1920s VNU Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities, Vol. 29, No. 4 (2013) 38-44 INFORMATION-DISCUSSION Hồ Chí Minh Thought on International Relations of the Vietnamese Revolution in the 1920s Phạm Quốc Thành*

More information

U.S. History & Government Unit 12 WWII Do Now

U.S. History & Government Unit 12 WWII Do Now 1. Which precedent was established by the Nuremberg war crimes trials? (1) National leaders can be held responsible for crimes against humanity. (2) Only individuals who actually commit murder during a

More information

China s Foreign Policy under Xi Jinping

China s Foreign Policy under Xi Jinping 10 Пленарное заседание Hu Wentao Guangdong University o f Foreign Studies China s Foreign Policy under Xi Jinping The main external issues confronted with China Firstly, How to deal with the logic o f

More information

Since the Vietnam War ended in 1975, the

Since the Vietnam War ended in 1975, the Commentary After the War: 25 Years of Economic Development in Vietnam by Bui Tat Thang Since the Vietnam War ended in 1975, the Vietnamese economy has entered a period of peaceful development. The current

More information

The Cold War. Origins - Korean War

The Cold War. Origins - Korean War The Cold War Origins - Korean War What is a Cold War? WW II left two nations of almost equal strength but differing goals Cold War A struggle over political differences carried on by means short of direct

More information

How China Can Defeat America

How China Can Defeat America How China Can Defeat America By YAN XUETONG Published: November 20, 2011 WITH China s growing influence over the global economy, and its increasing ability to project military power, competition between

More information

Statement by H.E. Mr. Choe Su Hon Head of the Delegation of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea

Statement by H.E. Mr. Choe Su Hon Head of the Delegation of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea Press Release Please check against delivery Statement by H.E. Mr. Choe Su Hon Head of the Delegation of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea At the General Debate of the fifty-ninth session of the

More information

Chapter 18 Development and Globalization

Chapter 18 Development and Globalization Chapter 18 Development and Globalization 1. Levels of Development 2. Issues in Development 3. Economies in Transition 4. Challenges of Globalization Do the benefits of economic development outweigh the

More information

NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION NOVEMBER 2015 HISTORY: PAPER I SOURCE MATERIAL BOOKLET FOR SECTION B AND SECTION C

NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION NOVEMBER 2015 HISTORY: PAPER I SOURCE MATERIAL BOOKLET FOR SECTION B AND SECTION C NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION NOVEMBER 2015 HISTORY: PAPER I SOURCE MATERIAL BOOKLET FOR SECTION B AND SECTION C PLEASE TURN OVER Page ii of v SOURCE A An extract from a speech by George C. Marshall,

More information

September 11, 1964 Letter from the Korean Workers Party Central Committee to the Central Committee of the CPSU

September 11, 1964 Letter from the Korean Workers Party Central Committee to the Central Committee of the CPSU Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org September 11, 1964 Letter from the Korean Workers Party Central Committee to the Central Committee of the CPSU Citation:

More information

The Socialist Party by Job Harriman Published in The Western Comrade [Los Angeles], vol. 3, no. 12 (April 1916), pp

The Socialist Party by Job Harriman Published in The Western Comrade [Los Angeles], vol. 3, no. 12 (April 1916), pp The Socialist Party by Job Harriman Published in The Western Comrade [Los Angeles], vol. 3, no. 12 (April 1916), pp. 23-27. The deplorable condition in which we find the Socialist Party calls for a frank

More information

CHAPTER I CONSTITUTION OF THE CHINESE SOVIET REPUBLIC

CHAPTER I CONSTITUTION OF THE CHINESE SOVIET REPUBLIC CHAPTER I CONSTITUTION OF THE CHINESE SOVIET REPUBLIC THE first All-China Soviet Congress hereby proclaims before the toiling masses of China and of the whole world this Constitution of the Chinese Soviet

More information

From Leadership among Nations to Leadership among Peoples

From Leadership among Nations to Leadership among Peoples From Leadership among Nations to Leadership among Peoples By Ambassador Wendelin Ettmayer* Let us define leadership as the ability to motivate others to accomplish a common goal, to overcome difficulties,

More information

Unit III Outline Organizing Principles

Unit III Outline Organizing Principles Unit III Outline Organizing Principles British imperial attempts to reassert control over its colonies and the colonial reaction to these attempts produced a new American republic, along with struggles

More information

FOREIGN LANGUAGES PRESS PEKING 1964

FOREIGN LANGUAGES PRESS PEKING 1964 LETTER OF THE CENTRAL COMMITTEE OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF CHINA IN REPLY TO THE LETTER OF THE CENTRAL COMMITTEE OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF THE SOVIET UNION DATED JULY 30, 1964 FOREIGN LANGUAGES PRESS PEKING

More information

THE NON-ALIGNED MOVEMENT

THE NON-ALIGNED MOVEMENT THE NON-ALIGNED MOVEMENT MEANING OF THE NON-ALIGNED MOVEMENT According to Pandit Nehru, the Prime Minister of India, "The term was coined and used with the meaning of non-alignment with great power blocs

More information

Leninism: An Ideology Indispensable for Opening the Path for the Progress of Society - Hardial Bains -

Leninism: An Ideology Indispensable for Opening the Path for the Progress of Society - Hardial Bains - Leninism: An Ideology Indispensable for Opening the Path for the Progress of Society - Hardial Bains - The victory of the Great October Socialist Revolution in Russia in 1917 was the most outstanding example

More information

BUILDING SOVEREIGNTY, PREVENTING HEGEMONY:

BUILDING SOVEREIGNTY, PREVENTING HEGEMONY: BUILDING SOVEREIGNTY, PREVENTING HEGEMONY: The Challenges for Emerging Forces in the Globalised World International and Multidisciplinary Conference in the framework of a commemoration of the 60th anniversary

More information

Public Schools: Make Them Private by Milton Friedman (1995)

Public Schools: Make Them Private by Milton Friedman (1995) Public Schools: Make Them Private by Milton Friedman (1995) Space for Notes Milton Friedman, a senior research fellow at the Hoover Institution, won the Nobel Prize for Economics in 1976. Executive Summary

More information

June, 1980 East German Report on the Eleventh Interkit Meeting in Poland, June 1980

June, 1980 East German Report on the Eleventh Interkit Meeting in Poland, June 1980 Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org June, 1980 East German Report on the Eleventh Interkit Meeting in Poland, June 1980 Citation: East German Report on the

More information

Socialism. Marxist Education Series: No.4

Socialism. Marxist Education Series: No.4 Marxist Education Series: No.4 Socialism 1,000 million people, a half of all humanity, arc now part of the powerful world socialist system. For them the chains of bondage have been broken. Those who still

More information

Closing Address by Newly Elected COSATU President-Zingiswa Losi

Closing Address by Newly Elected COSATU President-Zingiswa Losi Closing Address by Newly Elected COSATU President-Zingiswa Losi The challenges women face in their work-place and society is partly influenced by the system which still identifies women not capable of

More information

Chapter 33 Reading Guide: Africa, the Middle East, and Asia in the Era of Independence

Chapter 33 Reading Guide: Africa, the Middle East, and Asia in the Era of Independence Chapter Summary. Deep divisions between ethnic and religious groups remained when European rulers disappeared from their former colonies. Economic life was hampered by concessions made to the departing

More information

netw rks Reading Essentials and Study Guide Politics and Economics, Lesson 3 Ford and Carter

netw rks Reading Essentials and Study Guide Politics and Economics, Lesson 3 Ford and Carter and Study Guide Lesson 3 Ford and Carter ESSENTIAL QUESTION How do you think the Nixon administration affected people s attitudes toward government? How does society change the shape of itself over time?

More information

World History Unit 08a and 08b: Global Conflicts & Issues _Edited

World History Unit 08a and 08b: Global Conflicts & Issues _Edited Name: Period: Date: Teacher: World History Unit 08a and 08b: Global Conflicts & Issues 2012-2013_Edited Test Date: April 25, 2013 Suggested Duration: 1 class period This test is the property of TESCCC/CSCOPE

More information

League of Arab States. Declaration of the Arab Summit Conference at Algiers [28 November 1973]. An-Nahar (Beirut), 4 December 1973.

League of Arab States. Declaration of the Arab Summit Conference at Algiers [28 November 1973]. An-Nahar (Beirut), 4 December 1973. League of Arab States. Declaration of the Arab Summit Conference at Algiers [28 November 1973]. An-Nahar (Beirut), 4 December 1973. 1 In the last week of November 1973, Arab Heads of State met in Algiers

More information

Smashing the State in Rojava and Beyond: The Formation and Intentions of the International Revolutionary People s Guerrilla Forces

Smashing the State in Rojava and Beyond: The Formation and Intentions of the International Revolutionary People s Guerrilla Forces Azadî, xweserî û rizgariya jin Wek pîvan hêjatirîn gerek bên parastin! Smashing the State in Rojava and Beyond: The Formation and Intentions of the International Revolutionary People s Guerrilla Forces

More information

It s time for COSATU To come back HOME

It s time for COSATU To come back HOME It s time for COSATU To come back HOME 11 th National Congress of COSATU GEORGE MAVRIKOS General Secretary of the World Federation of Trade Unions Dear comrades, Once more from this podium we want to express

More information

On Nationalism FOREIGN LANGUAGES PUBLISHING HOUSE PYONGYANG, KOREA JUCHE 97 (2008)

On Nationalism FOREIGN LANGUAGES PUBLISHING HOUSE PYONGYANG, KOREA JUCHE 97 (2008) ON NATIONALISM On Nationalism FOREIGN LANGUAGES PUBLISHING HOUSE PYONGYANG, KOREA JUCHE 97 (2008) Foreword Many ideologies and theories have existed in the history of human ideology, and no other ideology

More information

The 1960s ****** Two young candidates, Democrat John F. Kennedy and Republican Richard M. Nixon ran for president in 1960.

The 1960s ****** Two young candidates, Democrat John F. Kennedy and Republican Richard M. Nixon ran for president in 1960. The 1960s A PROMISING TIME? As the 1960s began, many Americans believed they lived in a promising time. The economy was doing well, the country seemed poised for positive changes, and a new generation

More information

THE GREAT GREEN CHARTER OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE JAMAHIRIYAN ERA

THE GREAT GREEN CHARTER OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE JAMAHIRIYAN ERA THE GREAT GREEN CHARTER OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE JAMAHIRIYAN ERA Adopted 12 June 1988 Inspired by the first Declaration of the Great Revolution of Al Fateh (1 September 1969), which was the definitive triumph

More information

August 04, 1971 Minutes of the Joint Meeting of the Central Committee and the Ministers Council

August 04, 1971 Minutes of the Joint Meeting of the Central Committee and the Ministers Council Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org August 04, 1971 Minutes of the Joint Meeting of the Central Committee and the Ministers Council Citation: Minutes of the

More information

Neutrality and War (Delivered October 13, 1939)

Neutrality and War (Delivered October 13, 1939) Neutrality and War (Delivered October 13, 1939) Tonight, I speak again to the people of this country who are opposed to the United States entering the war which is now going on in Europe. We are faced

More information

AP WORLD HISTORY HOMEWORK SHEET #2

AP WORLD HISTORY HOMEWORK SHEET #2 AP WORLD HISTORY HOMEWORK SHEET #2 Textbook: Bentley, Jerry H. & Herbert F. Ziegler. Traditions & Encounters: A Global Perspective on the Past - 3 rd Edition H.W. #38 Read 495-498, 548, 636-646 - Absolutism

More information

2017 National Security Strategy: Question and Answer

2017 National Security Strategy: Question and Answer 2017 National Security Strategy: Question and Answer 1. How does this strategy put America First? Where is the America First in this Strategy? This strategy puts America first by looking at all challenges

More information

Democracy: The Never-Ending Battle A Conversation with Lech Walesa

Democracy: The Never-Ending Battle A Conversation with Lech Walesa Democracy: The Never-Ending Battle A Conversation with Lech Walesa Orlando, Florida, U.S.A. Worldviews for the 21st Century: A Monograph Series John C. Bersia, Editor-in-Chief Johanna Marizan, Business

More information

SET UP YOUR NEW (LAST!) TOC

SET UP YOUR NEW (LAST!) TOC SET UP YOUR NEW (LAST!) TOC DIVIDE THE BERLIN AIRLIFT & UNITED NATIONS BOX IN HALF AS SHOWN BELOW Learning Goal 1: Describe the causes and effects of the Cold War and explain how the Korean War, Vietnam

More information

GLOBALIZATION S CHALLENGES FOR THE DEVELOPED COUNTRIES

GLOBALIZATION S CHALLENGES FOR THE DEVELOPED COUNTRIES GLOBALIZATION S CHALLENGES FOR THE DEVELOPED COUNTRIES Shreekant G. Joag St. John s University New York INTRODUCTION By the end of the World War II, US and Europe, having experienced the disastrous consequences

More information

Paul W. Werth. Review Copy

Paul W. Werth. Review Copy Paul W. Werth vi REVOLUTIONS AND CONSTITUTIONS: THE UNITED STATES, THE USSR, AND THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF IRAN Revolutions and constitutions have played a fundamental role in creating the modern society

More information

ZOGBY INTERNATIONAL. Arab Gulf Business Leaders Look to the Future. Written by: James Zogby, Senior Analyst. January Zogby International

ZOGBY INTERNATIONAL. Arab Gulf Business Leaders Look to the Future. Written by: James Zogby, Senior Analyst. January Zogby International ZOGBY INTERNATIONAL Arab Gulf Business Leaders Look to the Future Written by: James Zogby, Senior Analyst January 2006 2006 Zogby International INTRODUCTION Significant developments are taking place in

More information

American Government Chapter 6

American Government Chapter 6 American Government Chapter 6 Foreign Affairs The basic goal of American foreign policy is and always has been to safeguard the nation s security. American foreign policy today includes all that this Government

More information

Glasnost and the Intelligentsia

Glasnost and the Intelligentsia Glasnost and the Intelligentsia Ways in which the intelligentsia affected the course of events: 1. Control of mass media 2. Participation in elections 3. Offering economic advice. Why most of the intelligentsia

More information